Natural scene categorization with minimal attention: evidence from negative priming |
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Authors: | Otsuka Sachio Kawaguchi Jun |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Graduate School of Environment Study, Nagoya University, Chikusaku, Japan. s050307d@mbox.nagoya-u.ac.jp |
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Abstract: | Research has demonstrated that objects in natural scenes are categorized without the deployment of attention. However, in these types of studies, participants were required to directly respond to peripherally presented scenes, which might lead some participants to move their attention. If this is the case, the above conclusion concerning natural scenes may not be valid. We investigated this issue by using a negative priming (NP) paradigm in which participants did not directly respond to peripheral stimuli. Our results showed NP effect from ignored stimuli in natural scene categorization, but neither in letter discrimination (Experiment 1) nor in line-drawing categorization (Experiment 2). In addition, NP effects were observed even when probe stimuli were words (Experiments 3A and 3B). These findings suggest that people can categorize objects in natural scenes with minimal attention, that this process is specific to natural scenes, and that it is based on the semantic information of the images. |
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